#lavinia dickinson

LIVE

aether-xx:

Lavinnia is becoming my fave character this season 2

damn-u-right:

So, like, sgcw was over now, right, which means no more Supercorp content, which in turn means all of us lgbts are looking for other shows with wlw couples to watch.

I saw one that said Dickinson on Apple TV+ is great so I started watching like the good gay I am. But y’all, why didn’t anyone tell me Emily and Sue were apart for most of the season and that Emily would be mooning over this random guy? Why?

Please tell me, fellow lgbts, should I continue watching? Does it get better?

Just skip to the season 2 finale for the content you want. If you’re into writing, however, watch the whole thing. Season 3 is airing now. And it’s supposed to be the final season.

BONUS: the actor who plays SUE just married the actor who plays Vinnie. So basically SUE has had ALL 3 DICKINSIBS! Hahahah.

Redemption for the GAYS!!! Bwahahahah! ️‍

EMISUE FOREVER, THO ♥️

  • Anna Baryshnikov Icons, like or credit jadesmycure if you save/use!
Title: Mabel Loomis Todd Reacts to the Final Season of Dickinson. Panel 1: Mabel looks affronted while watching Jane say to Austin: “You’re asking me to live a life of shame and I’m not going to do that.” Panel 2: Mabel looks down at her nails with raised eyebrows and says, “If that’s a veiled criticism about me, I won’t hear it and I won’t respond to it.”
Panel 3: Mabel puts her hand on her heart while onscreen Austin cries. She says, “For fans of Austin, please know that he will soon be the happiest man in the world when he meets me.” Panel 4: Mabel looks smug while Austin continues to cry in the scene. “Austin and I were in what you might call a spiritual marriage for many years.” Panel 5: Mabel looks put out and disappointed. On screen, Emily and Sue look at Sue’s baby. Mabel says, “Ugh, Ned’s in this?”
Panel 6: Mabel smirks, “Oh, you want me to say something about Ned? Fine!” Panel 7: Mabel, happily, “Was I flirting with him before hooking up with his father?” Panel 8: She winks at you, “I’ll never tell!” Panel 9: Mabel looks enraged, “Unlike Ned! That little shit wasted no time telling his mother about me and Austin!” Panel 10: Mabel reacts to Louisa May Alcott on screen, “I actually did meet Louisa May Alcott when I was a girl.”
Panel 11: Mabel looks at you and says, “I didn’t really care for that book she wrote, Small Women? It was just so domestic, and boring.” Panel 12: Mabel, happily, “I’m a career woman at heart, a girl boss! I never had the time for homemaking. That’s for the Susans of the world.” Panel 13: Mabel puts her hand over her heart as she watches Austin looking into the crib at his baby. “Austin really was a wonderful father, but Susan poisoned the children against us.” Panel 14: Mabel looks back at you and explains, “All he asked of them was to accept me as the love of his life!” Panel 15: Mabel looks awkwardly away, “…and give me some of their inheritance.”
Panel 16: On screen, Mr. Higginson holds a letter to Emily. Mabel looks smugly at you with her hand over heart and says, “I bet you didn’t know that I was the one who convinced Mr. Higginson to publish dear Emily’s poems!” Panel 17: Mabel continues, “I think the poems confused him - he stepped away from our project after the first two volumes.” Panel 18: Mabel, happily, “He just didn’t understand her the way I do!” Panel 19: Austin in episode 5 says, “I’m divorcing you, Susan.” Mabel, enraged, shouts back: “I fucking wish!!!”
Panel 20: On screen, Austin and Sue come to an agreement in the sixth episode. Mabel watches and says, “My nontraditional marriage was the first of its kind.” Panel 21: Mabel looks extremely smug, “I enjoyed having a lot of sex with two gorgeous men who worshipped me” Panel 22: Mabel looks up thoughtfully, “and my parents helped raise my daughter… I want to say Molly?” Panel 23: A voice from out of frame shouts “Millie!” while Mabel still thinks about it. Panel 24: Mabel, happily, “Oh that’s right, little Millie.”
Panel 25: On screen, Lavinia tells Emily, “I wasn’t gonna let everyone forget my sister” in episode 7. Mabel shouts back, “And who did all the work, Lavinia???” Panel 26: Mabel is even angrier, “Who painstakingly typed them up and got them out the door???” Panel 27: Sylvia Plath says, “The only thing Emily Dickinson did was wear white and cry.” Mabel looks awkwardly at you.
Panel 28: Mabel waves you away and says, “Oh, don’t look at me like that. The myth of ‘Emily the Sad Recluse’ existed well before I arrived in Amherst.” Panel 29: Mabel, happily, “It was a great source of inspiration to me!” Panel 30: Mabel is exasperated while watching Emily kiss Sue’s neck in episode 9, “What even is the basis for this relationship?!” Panel 31: On screen, Sue leans against the door. Mabel says angrily, “My dearest closest confidant Emily wrote many wonderful poems for me and no one made an award-winning series about our intimate friendship!!”
Panel 32: Mabel holds up a small piece of paper happily and says, “Here’s one that was never published - Emily sent this to me with a lovely bouquet from her garden.” Panel 33: Mabel looks loftily down, “It’s a clever acronym.” Panel 34: A close-up of the piece of paper. In Emily’s handwriting from roughly the 1880s it says, “Fuck Off” and then her signature below. Panel 35: Mabel looks down at the paper indignantly and reads, “Fortitude Under Coital Knowledge, Obviously Friends Forever!!!” Panel 36: On screen, Emily rows a boat in episode 10. Mabel looks tired and dismissive, “Is that the end? What a beautifully crafted pack of lies.”
Panel 37: Mabel raises one finger and says, “Except for Susan!” Panel 38: Mabel angrily says, “That was a detailed and accurate portrayal of the vilest creature to ever walk the Earth!” Panel 39: Mabel looks back at the screen sorrowfully with her hand on over her heart, “It’s unfortunate that audiences have to settle for this instead of my rapturous recitations of dear Emily’s poems.” Panel 40: Mabel, happily, “They sound much better after I’ve smoothed them out!” Panel 41: Mabel opens a small chest filled with papers. She is very very happy and excited. “Let me read you a few of the rave reviews I received.” Panel 42: Mabel takes a piece of paper out of the chest and clears her throat, “Ahem!” End.

“A beautifully crafted pack of lies.” – Mabel Loomis Todd Reacts to the Final Season of Dickinson

Previously: Mabel Loomis Todd Reacts to Two Seasons of Dickinson

Sources: Lives Like Loaded Guns by Lyndall Gordon, Austin and Mabel: The Amherst Affair and Love Letters of Austin Dickinson and Mabel Loomis Todd by Polly Longsworth, White Heat: The Friendship of Emily Dickinson and Thomas Wentworth Higginson by Brenda Wineapple, emilydickinson.org, Open Me Carefully by Martha Nell Smith and Ellen Louise Hart, Wild Nights with Emily movie, my own imagination

Mabel Loomis Todd Reacts to Two Seasons of DickinsonSources: Lives Like Loaded Guns by Lyndall GordoMabel Loomis Todd Reacts to Two Seasons of DickinsonSources: Lives Like Loaded Guns by Lyndall GordoMabel Loomis Todd Reacts to Two Seasons of DickinsonSources: Lives Like Loaded Guns by Lyndall GordoMabel Loomis Todd Reacts to Two Seasons of DickinsonSources: Lives Like Loaded Guns by Lyndall GordoMabel Loomis Todd Reacts to Two Seasons of DickinsonSources: Lives Like Loaded Guns by Lyndall GordoMabel Loomis Todd Reacts to Two Seasons of DickinsonSources: Lives Like Loaded Guns by Lyndall GordoMabel Loomis Todd Reacts to Two Seasons of DickinsonSources: Lives Like Loaded Guns by Lyndall GordoMabel Loomis Todd Reacts to Two Seasons of DickinsonSources: Lives Like Loaded Guns by Lyndall GordoMabel Loomis Todd Reacts to Two Seasons of DickinsonSources: Lives Like Loaded Guns by Lyndall GordoMabel Loomis Todd Reacts to Two Seasons of DickinsonSources: Lives Like Loaded Guns by Lyndall Gordo

Mabel Loomis Todd Reacts to Two Seasons of Dickinson

Sources: Lives Like Loaded Guns by Lyndall Gordon, Greg Johnson’s review of Austin and Mabel: The Amherst Affair and Love Letters of Austin Dickinson and Mabel Loomis Todd by Polly Longsworth in The Georgia Review in 1984, emilydickinson.org, Open Me Carefully by Martha Nell Smith and Ellen Louise Hart, Wild Nights with Emily movie, my own imagination


Post link
loading